In the 14-year period of 2005 through 2018, canines killed 471 Americans. Pit bulls contributed to 66% (311) of these deaths. Combined, pit bulls and rottweilers contributed to 76% of the total recorded deaths. | More »

2013 Fatal Dog Attack Breed Identification Photographs

Breed Misidentification Propaganda Explained

DogsBite.org - Due to the endless onslaught of pro-pit bull and animal welfare groups who proclaim that a pit bull cannot be identified by it's owner, family members, animal control officers, police officers, the media and more, we located as many photographs of fatally attacking dogs in 2013 as we could. Of the 32 total recorded deaths last year, 19 fatalities1 had identification photographs of the attacking dogs. 17 of these fatalities, 89%, involved pit bulls and their mixes.

Of all fatalities with photographs, 53% (10) were provided by the media, 32% (6) were provided by the dog's owner or family member and 16% (3) were located on social media websites. Notably, 100% of the fatal dog attacks in South Carolina (3) had identification photographs. In California, 4 of the 5 fatal occurrences had identification imagery. Of the 13 deaths without photographs, about a third involved the dogs being shot dead on scene and another third did not involve pit bulls.

News reports pertaining to fatal dog attacks -- without identification photographs -- are nearly always multi-sourced. This means that multiple parties have identified the dogs including, but not limited to: animal control officers, police officers, other first responders, the dog's owner or family members, and even veterinarians. Pro-pit bull and animal welfare groups would have the public and lawmakers believe that each of these cited sources is invalid when a pit bull is involved.

"Breed identification" of fatal dog attacks that do not involve pit bulls, however, are accepted at face value by pit bull promoters.

Face value meaning that other breeds of dogs that kill human beings have no identification requirements beyond a simple description of the dog, sourced or otherwise, in a news article. That alone is sufficient to pro-pit bull and animal welfare groups. The "breed misidentification" propaganda machine that roars beneath fatal pit bull attacks is limited only to pit bulls and their mixes.2 The "loyal" dog breed that kills more Americans than all other dog breeds combined.

ASPCA Breed Identification Study

Instead of taking readers down the mind numbing path of the volume of pro-pit bull penned papers, quasi-studies and surveys which purport that breed identification, in the case of pit bulls, is impossible, why not share results from a recent ASPCA study showing the exact opposite? The ASPCA, a national animal welfare group, is a heavy pusher of the "breed misidentification" theme, as are other national animal welfare groups, including the HSUS and Best Friends Animal Society.

In September, the ASPCA released study findings showing that visual breed identification by intake staff at Richmond SPCA agreed with DNA results 96% of the time when identifying pit bulls and their mixes. The study was "supposed" to show that if a DNA test result card was placed on the cage of the dog, instead of a card labeled "pit mix," the dog would be more adoptable. This was based on the faulty assumption that intake staff would often incorrectly identify pit bulls.

The dogs were divided into two groups, one with cards labeled "pit-mix" or "pit-type," the other with DNA test result cards indicating a pit bull as an American Staffordshire terrier, Staffordshire bull terrier or American bulldog. There was little difference in adoption rates.3 Further, because the ASPCA assumed that visual identification by workers would be much lower, they also assumed that the DNA results would not be jam-packed with bully-type breeds, like they were in the study.

Due to this, the ASPCA could not even test the hypothesis of their study: Looks like an X, but is really a Y.

The first finding I am sharing here impacted our ability to answer some of the questions we were hoping to answer in a significant way. We found out just how well Richmond SPCA staff did in visually identifying dogs likely to have Staffordshire terrier, American Staffordshire terrier or American bulldog as at least 25% of their breed make-up. Out of the 91 dogs, only 4 dogs had none of these breeds in their DNA, and 57% had one of those breeds as the primary breed ... but at least at the Richmond SPCA, with a specific look and type, staff were quite good at breed identification—correctly identifying 96% of the dogs in the study as having at least 25% of the breeds noted above ... As we anticipated that more of the dogs would not have bully-type breeds in their reports, we were not able to dive into the question of "he looks like a X but he really is a Y." - Dr. Emily Weiss

Visual identification in the ASPCA study was specifically to separate the dogs into just two groups: bull breed dogs and non-bull breed dogs, the other two studies lacked this limitation.

Intake staff worked with a real population of dogs in the ASPCA study -- strays and surrenders in a specific city, not a group of dogs that were chosen for the study using unspecified and unknown criteria.

Intake staff evaluated actual dogs in the ASPCA study. The other two studies only used photographs of dogs (we believe both shared the same photographs too).

See:Summary | Full blog post | Daniel "Doe," 2-years old, was killed by three of his babysitter's four pit bulls while under her care on September 22, 2013 in Gilbert, Arizona.

See:Summary | Full blog post - Daxton Borchardt, 14-months old, was killed by his babysitter's two pit bulls in a prolonged attack on March 6, 2013 in Walworth, Wisconsin.

See:Summary | Full blog post | Isaiah Aguilar, 2-years old, was killed by a tethered pit bull after chasing a balloon into his neighbor's poorly fenced yard on February 16, 2013.

See:Summary | Full blog post - Joan Kappen, 75-years old, was brutally killed by a loose bullmastiff while taking a walk in a gated retirement community on November 21, 2013.

See:Summary | Full blog post - Jordyn Arndt, 4-years old, was savagely attacked by her babysitter's pit bull while under her care on April 22, 2013. She died the following day.

See:Summary | Full blog post | Juan Campos, 96-years old, was discovered dead in his backyard, covered in bite marks, with three pit bulls on August 30, 2013 in Katy, Texas.

See:Summary | Full blog post | Katherine Atkins, 25-years old, was brutally struck down by her boyfriend's two pet pit bulls on November 4, 2013 in Kernersville, North Carolina.

See:Summary | Full blog post - Levi Watson, 4-years old, was fatally attacked by up to three pit bulls while visiting a relative's home in Bradford, Arkansas on November 8, 2013.

See:Summary | Full blog post | Nephi Selu, 6-years old, died after being bitten on the head by his uncle's pit bull on June 17, 2013. The boy's uncle is a San Mateo police officer.

See:Summary | Full blog post | Pamela Devitt, 63-years old, was brutally killed by four pit bulls while taking her daily walk on May 9, 2013. The dogs' owner faces a murder charge.

See:Summary | Full blog post | Samuel Zamudio, 2-years old, was killed by up to five pit bulls while staying at his grandmother's home on September 23, 2013 in Colton, California.

See:Summary | Full blog post - Terry Douglass, 56-years old, was killed by her pet pit bull in Baltimore, Maryland on November 1, 2013. The animal had attacked her twice before.

See:Summary | Full blog post - Tom Vick, 64-years old, was attacked and killed by up to five family dogs while breaking up a dog fight in his home in Bullhead City, Arizona.

See:Summary | Full blog post | Tyler Jett, 7-years old, was brutally attacked by two pit bull-mix dogs while playing in the front yard of his home on April 2, 2013. He died on April 7.

1Statistical information updated February 4, 2014 to reflect the addition of Levi Watson and related identification photographs.2The only other time breed misidentification comes into play is when a wolf-hybrid (often an illegal dog breed to own) is mislabeled as a husky-mix or malamute-mix after a serious or fatal dog attack.3This is also quite significant as shelters routinely label pit bulls and their mixes under the breed's obscured related pure breed names (American Staffordshire terrier, Staffordshire bull terrier, etc.) in hopes of improving the dog's adoption chances. Just one more enlightening aspect to the ASPCA's study that "ran off the rails" is the disclosure of how some shelters routinely flat out lie to the American public seeking to adopt dogs! That the obscured breed labeling did not even impact the adoption rate of these dogs, suggests that the public is catching onto these games and that an average person seeking to adopt a dog is indeed capable of identifying a pit bull.4Despite being survey and poster "quizzes" based upon photographs that were chosen using unspecified and unknown criteria, the NCRC funded or influenced "quizzes" are heralded by pro-pit and animal welfare groups as authentic research studies. The ASPCA bought into it as well, all too happily. But when they tried a real-world scenario based upon these quasi-studies, they met with real-world results: "visual breed identification by intake staff at Richmond SPCA agreed with DNA results 96% of the time when identifying pit bulls and their mixes."Additionally, the survey "quiz" (funded by the NCRC) is not dated so it is unclear which of the two "quizzes," both headed by Dr. Julie Levy, came first or if they were carried out simultaneously. Certainly some, if not all, of the photographs were shared between the two. As for the poster "quiz," which cites both Delise and Berkey of the NCRC, as well as Voith, who is funded by the NCRC and has a similar breed identification study, one must look very carefully at the stated methodology that leaves out any reference about the "quiz" being based upon photographs and not live dogs. Below is the stated methodology. Remember, this is so-called university level research with at least two PhDs listed as authors."In this prospective cross-sectional study, 4 staff members at 4 different shelters each recorded the suspected primary breed of 30 dogs, for a total of 16 observers and 120 dogs. In this study, the terms American pit bull terrier, American Staffordshire terrier, Staffordshire bull terrier, and pit bull were included in the study definition of pit bull-type breeds. Blood was collected from each dog for DNA breed signature. Dogs were coded as "pit bull" if American Staffordshire terrier or Staffordshire bull terrier were identified to comprise at least 25% of the breed signature. Agreement among individual shelter staff members regarding identification of pit bulls was determined with the kappa statistic. The sensitivity and specificity of each staff member’s identification of pit bulls with DNA breed signature as a gold standard was calculated."5Wisdom Panel by Mars Veterinary is widely recognized as the leading DNA testing lab.6The Colorado Dog Fanciers, Inc. et al. v. The City and County of Denver, 820 P. 2d 644 (Colo.1991)"Since section 8-55 allows the determination that a dog is a pit bull based on nonscientific evidence, the dog owners assert that they are denied substantive due process. The city, however, is not required to meet its burden of proof with mathematical certainty of scientific evidence. Therefore, even though section 8-55 permits a finding of pit bull status to be based on expert opinion or on nonscientific evidence, such a procedure does not violate the dog owner’s due process rights."

"discoveries suggest that the interface of physical and behavioral conformation mean it is not possible to breed out the impulsive aggressive behavior of fighting dogs while retaining their shape and appearance. Form follows function: one cannot have a dog whose entire body and brain are adapted to executing the killing bite, without having a dog who will execute the killing bite." http://www.thetruthaboutpitbulls.blogspot.com/search/label/alexandra%20semyonova

The whole 'breeds' discussion is a red herring. It used to be that the authors of it — the pit bull lobby — tried to teach us that the pit bull isn't a breed, but a type of dog. This is true. The pit bull lobby abandoned this truth in favor of 'breed' fictions when it turned out that banning the entire type worked to dramatically decrease dog bite related fatalities.

Dogmen call all the bully 'breeds' simply bulldogs. Diane Jessup calls them 'grippers'. This type of dog — the gripping bulldog — has been around since at least the 14th century, when bull and bear baiting was a popular royal sport. Some 500 years before the first kennel clubs were founded and started playing their fancy breed name games.

All of these 'breeds' (and any mixes of them) are still the same bear shredding, horse mauling bulldog they were 500 years ago. People back then had no problem identifying a gripping bulldog, and they knew without kennel clubs exactly which dogs to breed to get gripping maulers. People now still have no problem identifying the gripping bulldog type. Even the pit bull fanatics know exactly which 'breeds' to look at when they want a new gripping bulldog.

As for the pit bull lobby's 'science', it's worth as much as Big Tobacco's 'science' was back when lots of bought 'scientists' were willing to say there was no connection between smoking and lung cancer. This later shifted to bought 'scientific' statements of 'no proven causal connection' — but all the same, smoking has ended up banned everywhere it endangers anyone's health but the smoker's.

As the dead pile up, the gripping bulldog lobby is fighting a losing battle. It's just that it's a shame it's taking as long for them to lose it as it took Big Tobacco. And BTW, shame on so-called 'scientists' who are selling themselves this way. They'll go down in history the same way the Big Tobacco mercenaries have – forgotten, and when not forgotten ridiculed and despised.

This is a very useful and informative page. I'll be sending people here in the future if I run into anybody who still asserts "Chihuahuas are more aggressive!" Definitely no Chi's on this page. Just a lot of ugly grippers that have been bred for 200 years to shake and kill.

So tired of hearing that line about small yipping dogs bite more. Amazing the lack of i intelligence these people who protect this breed display by even saying that. It is because that's all they can say they have no argument. It is well known what dogs are responsible for such mauling death and destruction . The breed should be bred out and stopped

Haven't you seen so many photos just like this in your news feed on social networks, "This is So-and-So, he's a great dog, please adopt him today, etc." Maybe with some ridiculous pit propaganda about "nanny dogs" thrown in.

No kidding, Packhorse. In Pima County, Arizona, our tax-supported animal shelter has pages and pages of this dreck. So does our local humane society. They're posted by "friends" of the shelters, and my use of the quotes is deliberate. With such people for friends, who needs enemies?